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RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
56
RethinkingModernArchitecture:HASSELLsContributiontotheTransformationofAdelaidesTwentiethCenturyUrbanLandscapeCarolineCosgrove
Abstract
There has been considerable academic, professional and community interest in South
Australias nineteenth century built heritage, but less in that of the states twentieth
century. Now that the twenty-first century is in its second decade, it is timely to
attempt to gain a clearer historical perspective on the twentieth century and its
buildings. The architectural practice HASSELL, which originated in South Australia
in 1917, has established itself nationally and internationally and has received national
peer recognition, as well as recognition in the published literature for its industrial
architecture, its education, airport, court, sporting, commercial and performing arts
buildings, and the well-known Adelaide Festival Centre. However, architectural
historians have generally overlooked the practices broader role in the development of
modern architecture until recently, with the acknowledgement of its post-war
industrial work.1
This paper explores HASSELLs contribution to the development of modern
architecture in South Australia within the context of growth and development in the
twentieth century. It examines the need for such studies in light of heritage
considerations and presents an overview of the firms involvement in transforming the
urban landscape in the city and suburbs of Adelaide. Examples are given of
HASSELLs mid-twentieth century industrial, educational and commercial buildings.
This paper has been peer reviewed
FJHPVolume272011
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Figure 1: Adelaides urban landscape with the Festival Centre in the middle distance. (Photograph:
Paul Wallace)
Introduction
As in the other states, in South Australia heritage surveys have identified places for
inclusion on the South Australian Heritage Register. But recently there has been an
upsurge of growth in Adelaide and some of the twentieth century buildings that had
not yet been considered, or had been rejected for heritage listing for various reasons,
are being demolished. In this year of South Australias 175th anniversary of its
colonisation, two prominent twentieth century buildings, Harris Scarfe department
store (192223) in Grenfell Street and the former Glenelg Ozone Cinema (1937) in
Jetty Road, Glenelg, have been demolished. This follows last years demolition of
Union Hall (1958) located on the University of Adelaides city campus and
HASSELLs Channel 10 (later Channel 7) TV studios at Gilberton. Protest groups
were formed to attempt to save both the Glenelg cinema and Union Hall, but neither
was heritage listed despite attempts to do so; no protest groups were organised for
Harris Scarfe or Channel 7, although the plight of Harris Scarfe received considerable
media attention. Given these developments, and the threat to other mid-twentieth
century buildings, it is timely to consider the buildings of the last century located in
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
58
and around our urban centre. Who designed and built them and what were they trying
to achieve?
In this paper I will examine the architectural practice HASSELL, starting with its
origins in the early twentieth century; I will then give an overview of the period prior
to World War Two when two of its major principals, Colin Hassell and Jack
McConnell became partners and modern architecture was introduced in South
Australia. Finally, I will consider HASSELLs contribution through a study of some
industrial, commercial and education examples from the period following World War
Two to the 1970s. I will conclude with a summary of some themes that emerge from
the study.
Documenting and preserving twentieth century heritage buildings
Ironically, it was the post World War Two building boom that led to the destruction of
many of Australias nineteenth century heritage buildings.2 Community concern about
this situation led to the establishment of the Australian Heritage Commission in 1976.
This was followed by heritage legislation enacted in each of the states, which allowed
for heritage listing of places using criteria to determine significance as defined in the
Australia ICOMOS (International Council for Monuments and Sites) Charter for
Places of Cultural Significance (the Burra Charter, 1979). The Burra Charter defined
cultural significance as meaning aesthetic, historic, scientific or social value for past,
present or future generations.3 However, it has been noted that only a small number of
twentieth century places have been heritage listed compared to those of the nineteenth
century; even fewer places built after World War Two appear on these lists.4
Intensive efforts have been made to bring significant twentieth century heritage
places to notice by organisations such as the National Trust with its Committee on
Twentieth Century Buildings, the Australian Institute of Architects through its
Register of Significant Twentieth Century Architecture and Australia ICOMOS with
its (Un)Loved Modern Conference held at the Sydney Masonic Centre in July 2009.
In 1999 an Australian Branch of DOCOMOMO (International committee for
documentation and conservation of buildings, sites and neighbourhoods of the modern
movement) was established.5 In spite of these endeavours, many twentieth century
places continue to be demolished.
FJHPVolume272011
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In considering Australias built heritage, it is important to relate the histories of a
range of places, including those of the twentieth century, and to do so within their
context.6 This information then provides a critical understanding of the past, within
which a buildings history can be documented and assessed.7 It was in the twentieth
century that technological and design developments resulted in what came to be
known as modernist architecture. However, there are difficulties in heritage listing
and preserving many of these twentieth century places. It has been said that the
ordinary buildings in our cities such as factories, office buildings, shopping centres,
blocks of flats or residences are too common for their own good,8 and such places
are unlikely to be retained when they cease to have value in the market place.9 While
we would not expect to keep all of Australias twentieth century buildings, as Stropin
and Marsden argue, we should aim to protect significant examples to serve as
physical records of one of the most profound revolutions in our built environment
since European settlement.10
Modernism in South Australia
Although the subject of modernism has received considerable attention in the
international literature, it remains an emerging area of research for scholars of
Australian architectural history. With specific reference to South Australia, Michael
Page has discussed the subject in Sculptors in Space11 as part of his coverage of the
states architecture from 193686. There are other very brief references to the topic in
architectural histories such as JM Freelands Architecture in Australia: A History12
and Donald Johnsons Australian Architecture 190151: Sources of Modernism
(1980).13 It is also briefly covered in overview histories for the South Australian
Department for Environment and Heritages Twentieth Century Heritage Surveys,
both Stage One (192845) and Stage Two (194659).14 In this paper I will consider
the relationship of HASSELLs work to the development of modernism in South
Australia.
The architectural practice and modernism
Until recently, Australian architectural historians tended to avoid examining the work
of the architectural practice in the twentieth century, focusing instead on detailed
studies of prominent individual architects.15 One exception was Conrad Hamanns
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
60
Cities of Hope (1993), in which he explored the partnership of Maggie Edmond and
Peter Corrigan in the period 196292.16 In recent years, Philip Goad and others have
documented the history of the prominent Melbourne architectural practices
Stephenson and Turner,17 and Bates Smart.18 Another study is Architecture By Team
Devine Erby Mazlin: the multidisciplinary architectural practice, 19751995, in
which the authors examine the work and working methods of a Sydney-based
practice.19 Although there are three large South Australian practices still in operation
that commenced in Adelaide in the early twentieth century: Woods Bagot, Woodhead
and HASSELL, the only history of these that has been published is an overview of the
work of HASSELL: Poetic Pragmatism.20
In his chapter in Fibro House: Opera House, Goad refers to two government
buildings which had recently been demolished: the High Court in Darwin (1959) and
the State Office block in Sydney (196067).21 These buildings, which expressed the
functional, social agendas of the time, were not understood, he argues, due to lack of
research and hence, publication. While Goads examples are of buildings designed by
government architects, the same may be said of many of the public buildings designed
by architectural practices, particularly in the mid to late twentieth century. Together
with the earlier local examples given of demolition of twentieth century buildings, this
emphasises the need to examine and record architectural developments in this period.
Background: The modern movement in architecture
What do we think of when we think of modernist architecture? Some might say a
high-rise building in the city; some might say a building that has replaced a very good
example of Victorian architecture, for the worse! For others, it might be a boring
house or public building, with no decoration or interesting features. Anti-modernist
sentiment led to a backlash against modernist architecture throughout the world from
the mid-1960s.22 However, modernist architecture at the outset attempted to
incorporate principles that improved on the practices of the past.
Developments in modern architecture were initially strong in the United States, where
Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright are well-known for their modernist
buildings,23 but the modernist cause was taken up even more passionately in the early
twentieth century by European architects such as Le Corbusier in France, Erich
FJHPVolume272011
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Mendelsohn in Germany and Willem Dudok in Holland.24 A powerful influence on
architects in all parts of the world, including Australia, was to come from Walter
Gropius, who formed the Bauhaus in Germany in 1919 and was its Director until
1928.25
While there was considerable disparity among those involved in developing the
theories of modernism, a core of common ideas is apparent.26 Modern architects
rejected the historical styles of the nineteenth century and believed that an unadorned
building contained its own innate aesthetic appeal. They generally adhered to ideas
that had been developed by Sullivan and Wright, namely that architecture should be
confined to the basic elements, should be suited to its function and climate, and
should have an association with its site.27
In The New Architecture and The Bauhaus (1935), Walter Gropius explained that the
new approach meant that
[n]ew synthetic substances steel, concrete and glass are actively
superseding the traditional raw materials of construction. Their
rigidity and molecular density have made it possible to erect wide-
spanned and all but transparent structures, for which the skill of
previous ages was manifestly inadequate. This enormous saving in
structural volume was an architectural revolution in itself.28
Instead of forming a solid mass, walls could become mere screens between the
columns of the framework and could therefore be made of a lighter material; glass
could assume a greater structural importance. Hence continuous metal-framed
horizontal casement windows became more prevalent. Flat roofs were seen to have a
number of advantages, such as eliminating the use of poky attics with sloping
ceilings; making subsequent additions easier; and allowing the creation of a sun-
loggia, open-air gymnasium or childrens playground on the roof.29
The new architecture became known as the International Style from the time
Hitchcock and Johnson released their book, The International Style in 1932.30
However, Gropius rejected any reference to a Bauhaus style and imitators who
prostituted our fundamental precepts into modish trivialities,31 pointing out that [t]he
object of the Bauhaus was not to propagate any style, system or dogma, but simply
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
62
to exert a revitalizing influence on design.32 The Bauhaus did not base its teaching on
any preconceived ideas of form, but sought the vital spark of life behind lifes ever-
changing forms.33
HASSELLs early years
Philip Claridge was a prominent architect and a leader in his profession, who
understood that to operate a successful business, expansion was necessary. PR
Claridge & Associates opened an office in Renmark, South Australia, in 1930,
showing some optimism as it was during the Depression; this was probably the first
architectural office outside Adelaide. Claridges practice came to operate across the
state, designing and supervising many buildings in a variety of styles.34 In the 1930s
buildings by Claridge & Associates were generally Art Deco; for example, the
refacing of the Sands and McDougall building in King William Street, Adelaide;
Renmark Hotel; and the Soldiers Memorial Hall in Port Lincoln.35 These buildings
were designed in association with other architects or architectural firms, a business
practice that Claridge also appreciated.
Claridge was a good businessman, skilled at liaison,36 and his connections played a
large part in gaining work. For example, he was a member of the South Australian
Cricket Association and his practice was involved in work at the Adelaide Oval. He
also designed a house for the acclaimed cricketer Donald Bradman in Kensington
Park, Adelaide, in 1935;37 it was not modernist but can be described as Neo-Georgian,
an accepted style at the time.
From the mid-1930s, Claridge took on a number of associates who showed an interest
in modernist design. Russell Ellis, who was later to become one of the states pioneer
modernists, joined the practice as an associate in 1935.38 Colin Hassell became an
associate in 1937 on his return from a trip to England and Europe, where he had seen
the latest developments in modernism.39 The influence of international advances in
architecture were to intensify in South Australian when, in 1937, Claridges practice
was commissioned to design the new South Australian headquarters for the Bank of
New South Wales in Adelaide. Claridge travelled to Melbourne and engaged another
young architect, Jack McConnell, as an associate.
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Figure 2: Former Bank of New South Wales (1942), corner King William Street and North Terrace,
Adelaide. (Photograph: Paul Wallace)
Designed in the period after the Great Depression and prior to World War Two, the
Bank of New South Wales marked the rise of the banking sector at this time. It was a
very important project for the firm as its largest commission to date and, although it
was similar in design to the 1935 Bank of New South Wales building in Melbourne
(now demolished),40 it was later recognised as the states first prominent public
building that could be termed modernist.41 The Savings Bank of South Australia (now
BankSA), by the practice McMichael & Harris, was also built in this period (1938
43) but was Art Deco in design.42 As well as McConnell, Hassell and Ellis, those who
worked on the Bank of New South Wales included leading architect Louis Laybourne
Smith of the firm Woods, Bagot, Laybourne Smith and Irwin, who was engaged as a
consultant to Claridges practice to oversee the construction. In 1938 Hassell and
McConnell were admitted as partners, and the practice became Claridge, Hassell &
McConnell.43
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
64
In 1937, aged 24, Jack McConnell was working for the Melbourne firm of Edward F
Billson and had built up a reputation as a young architect when he accepted Claridges
offer of a job in Adelaide to assist in the design of the Bank of New South Wales.
McConnell was later to achieve wide acclaim for the influence of his work on
younger architects and gained a reputation as the most notable architect associated
with the so-called modern movement in South Australia.44
McConnell was not the only architect interested in or practising modernism in
Adelaide in the late 1930s. Jack Cheesman of the firm Gavin Lawson & Cheesman
was among the leaders in introducing modernism at this time. However, McConnell
had studied architecture at the University of Melbourne and attended the Atelier (or
studio) attached to the University, where, under the direction of noted modernist
Leighton Irwin, the leading students were destined to become important design
architects of the new generation.45 McConnell later worked for Irwin and had also
worked for the innovative architect, Harold Desbrowe Annear in Melbourne, and
acknowledges the influence of both.46 In addition, he was encouraged by the Victorian
modernist architect, Norman Seabrook.47 Although remarking later that on his arrival
in Adelaide he had been shocked that it was so far behind the times, especially in
architecture,48 he chose to stay and subsequently built two houses, one at Springfield
(1939) and the other in North Adelaide (1969).49
McConnell and the young South Australian modernists agreed with Gropiuss view of
modern architecture. They believed it was not a style but an approach, based on solid
principles. McConnells criticism of the more conventional members of the profession
led to him being twice refused membership of the South Australian Chapter of the
Royal Australian Institute of Architects (RAIA),50 but he finally became an Associate
in 1939.51 In that capacity, together with other young architects, including Jack
Cheesman and Colin Hassell, he established the Young Adelaide Architects Club.
The Club published regular articles in a local Saturday newspaper, The News, on
modernist architectural design, thus reaching a broad section of the community. It
challenged the prevailing attitude to Adelaides architecture, which McConnell said
was not very good, particularly in domestic structures. Tradition is too strong, and
imagination is lacking. We want the public to demand progressive work, instead of
this idea of combining 1938 interiors with Tudor exteriors.52
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Modernist influences
The Bank building stood out as an example of modern architecture, but McConnells
next design, for Deepacres Apartments (193942), in Melbourne Street, North
Adelaide, was a much clearer expression of modernist design. Multiple residential
buildings were still relatively new to Adelaide in this period and his client gave him a
free hand in the design, which has been described as exemplary in its forthright and
uncompromising approach to modern design principles.53 Both these buildings were
in prominent positions: the Bank on the corner of King William Street and North
Terrace, and Deepacres on the tram route into the city; and they were both solid
expressions of the new European-inspired architectural approach. Respected South
Australian architect Newell Platten did not work for Hassell & McConnell but
observed that these buildings, along with McConnells house at Springfield, as well as
the modernist houses of Russell Ellis at Springfield, who was influenced by
McConnell,54 were inspiring to young architects in those days. Previously they had
seen only pictures, whereas these were real buildings.55
Figure 3: Deepacres Apartments (1942), Melbourne Street, North Adelaide. (Photograph: Paul
Wallace)
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
66
Hassell & McConnell developed a reputation as a place where graduates could learn
about modernist design. Many architects who were associated with McConnell during
their early careers have paid tribute to his formative influence, in particular his
modernist approach.56
John Morphett, who in 1979 succeeded Colin Hassell as Managing Director and later
Chairman of HASSELL, describes McConnells influence:
McConnell had done a lot for modern architecture in South Australia.
They were a crusty old mob of architects in South Australia at that
time. McConnell came from Melbourne to work on the Bank of New
South Wales and then did Deepacres Flats in North Adelaide, which
became almost iconic as one of the earliest examples of modernism in
South Australia.57
Albert Gillissen, a senior lecturer in architecture at the University of Adelaide from
1963 to 1986, later commented that McConnells profound influence on architecture
came out of the principles that he had developed. He quoted McConnells own words
from an early interview: Learn from others but think for yourself; simplicity is the
keynote of beauty; composition distinguishes architecture from building, as it does
music from sound.58
However, when McConnell was asked a question about modernist architecture in the
1990s, he replied in his direct manner:
I dont believe in modernist architecture. I believe in modern
architecture because it is based on common sense and careful analysis
of functional requirements.59
Although he did not elaborate, this was a clear statement of his rejection of any
allusion to an association of style with modern architecture, which reflected Gropiuss
views.
Colin Hassell, who had joined the firm as an associate prior to McConnell, in the
same year, 1937, was also to become a dominant character in the firm, but in a
different way from McConnell. Hassell was the son of English migrants, and his
father had established the Hassell Press in Adelaide.60 He was therefore connected to
FJHPVolume272011
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Adelaides establishment, a privileged group whose wealth and connections meant
that they were able to exert a considerable amount of power. He attended Prince
Alfred College, the same school as Philip Claridge, and this connection was to
become important to the firm in terms of later networks.
Hassell had the traditional local training at the South Australian School of Mines, and
worked for Claridge after graduating in 1934 and for part of 1935. However, he was
unusual in that, like Jack Cheesman before him, he won a two-year overseas trip on an
Orient Line scholarship, studying and working in London architectural offices.61
While there, he visited Europe, where he took an interest in the teachings of the
Bauhaus; he was particularly impressed by the modernist work of Dudok at
Hilversum in Holland.62
Figure 4: Former BALM Paints factory (1940), 67 Lipson Street, Port Adelaide. (Photograph: Paul
Wallace)
On his return to Adelaide, Hassell designed a factory at 67 Lipson Street, Port
Adelaide, for BALM Paints (193840) in which he demonstrated how he had been
influenced by the functional modern European approach of the Bauhaus.63 This was
the practices first factory, and was to lead to other important commissions interstate.
Although an additional floor was added later, it remains a rare example of pre-World
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
68
War Two modernist factory architecture in South Australia and one of only a few in
Australia.
With McConnell and Hassell as partners, the practice Claridge, Hassell & McConnell
became prominent for its modernist approach in South Australia. The partnership with
Claridge continued until 1949, when Hassell & McConnell formed a separate practice.
Industrial expansion and modernist architecture in the post-war period
A period of austerity followed World War Two. Building materials were in short
supply, largely due to the controls introduced by state governments as the
reconstruction program proceeded.64 In South Australia, however, the post-war period
of recovery included a great expansion in the development of manufacturing as a
result of the move from a rural to an industrial economy. The Playford Government
had adopted an industrialisation policy prior to the War, but industrial development
was to increase markedly in the period after it.65 The main areas of production were
steel and motor vehicles and their allied industries. While other states competed for a
share of investment in the new industries, the Victorian government under Henry
Bolte was most successful in its implementation of a similar program to that of South
Australia from 195572.66
In Europe factory design had played a pivotal role in the development of modernism
in the early twentieth century. Those factories that were to have a major influence
were Albert Kahns designs for the Ford Motor Company in Detroit, USA (1907
1917),67 and Walter Gropiuss Fagus Factory in Alfeld, Germany (1911 with Adolf
Meyer).68 Post-war factory expansion was also to provide opportunities for the
development of Australian modernism. While it did not have the same national
coverage or rate of activity as the architectural practice Stephenson & Turner,69
Hassell & McConnell, along with a number of other large architectural practices, was
to play an important role in the design of modernist industrial architecture.
The International Harvester Company of Australia Pty Ltd was formed in 1912 when
it purchased the Australian assets of the American International Harvester Company,
which had its Australian head office in Melbourne and branches in all Australian
capital cities.70 Its first large factory was built in 1939 in Geelong, Victoria, where it
manufactured farm equipment. Shortly after the end of World War Two, Claridge,
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Hassell & McConnell was asked to design the new premises for the International
Harvester Company in Adelaide. The commission came about as a result of
McConnells contact with Walter Killough from the International Harvester Company
at the Amateur Sportsmans Club.71 Both Hassell and McConnell used their networks
to gain work and, as Club members, business was regularly combined with pleasure.
Further opportunities opened up for the practice when Killough became Australias
Managing Director in 1947.
Figure 5: International Harvester factory (1948), corner of East Terrace and Goodenough Street, Mile
End, Adelaide. (Source: International Harvester Company of Australia Pty Ltd souvenir brochure,
Harold Griggs Collection, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S167/1380)
Adelaides International Harvester Company building, located on the corner of East
Terrace and Goodenough Street, Southwark (now Mile End) was completed in 1948,
and marks the beginning of factory expansion in the post-war period. Modernist
features include a grid of circular concrete columns used as the load-bearing structure;
external glass walls which form an enclosure rather than supporting the roof; and the
use of curved glass at the corners. While it had the hallmarks of a modernist building,
it has been described as not yet a true example of the International Modern
Movement72 due to its symmetrical plan and the solid monumental entry, which are
features of Art Deco design. However, like the Bank of New South Wales, this is an
example of constraints imposed by the client. While McConnell did not think this
building was important in terms of modernism, he later explained:
Of all the projects, that at Southwark was the least important but it
was important to Hassell and McConnell in South Australia, where it
has been much admired. Personally I have never thought it one of my
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
70
best efforts. In the first place it had to comply with US prototype
branch offices (the restriction did not apply elsewhere) and secondly,
it was designed for air conditioning, which did not eventuate.73
As a result, McConnell felt he did not give enough attention to sun protection. He was
to give this aspect much greater consideration in his later designs.
The commission provided McConnell with his first opportunity to travel overseas and
led to other projects, which were to be important in terms of modernism. Decisions to
design factory buildings for the company in Victoria, New South Wales, Western
Australia and Queensland from 194850 were taken at meetings between Killough
and McConnell at International Harvester Companys Head Office in Chicago. The
location of the meeting was significant for the practice and for McConnell; it was his
first overseas trip and provided him with opportunities to visit the Companys
industrial buildings in the USA and gain an understanding of how to approach the
task.74
The first interstate expansion
Claridge, Hassell & McConnells first interstate office was established in Melbourne
in 1948, in a conference room in the International Harvester Companys showroom at
South Yarra.75 Henry Hayward, who had come from Melbourne and joined the
practice in Adelaide after the War, was to take charge of the Melbourne office, which
soon had a staff of three. While there were other smaller jobs, the first major
commission was the International Harvester Companys Dandenong plant in 1949.
Ken Cory, who was later to become a partner along with Hayward, joined Hassell &
McConnell in 1951, and the two were based in Melbourne, while McConnell travelled
back and forth between the Adelaide and Melbourne offices.76
Later Hassell & McConnell received further factory commissions in the area, based
on their work for the International Harvester Company, as well as from other contacts.
For example, factories designed for BALM (later Dulux) Paints after World War Two
at Port Adelaide, Dandenong Valley, Melbourne and Brisbane, resulted from Colin
Hassells work on the 193840 factory at Port Adelaide.77 The practice became
Hassell, McConnell & Partners in 1957 when Dick Roberts in Adelaide, and Hayward
and Cory in Melbourne, were admitted as partners.
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Developments in Adelaide
In Adelaide, by 1956, McConnell was able to take the initiative in his design for the
WD and HO Wills factory on the opposite side of the street to the International
Harvester Company building, and thought this a better effort in modernist terms.78 His
view is supported by a later critical evaluation.79 The Wills factory was also the first
major project that John Morphett worked on for Hassell & McConnell. Morphett
reveals the extent of his involvement in his statement: McConnell did the sketch
plans; I did the rest.80
Figure 6: WD and HO Wills Building (1956), corner of East Terrace and Goodenough Street, Mile
End, Adelaide. (Source: Jack H McConnell Collection, Architecture Museum, University of South
Australia, S270/1/1)
Morphett worked with Hassell & McConnell as a student from 195355, then joined
the practice after graduating. He was involved in a landmark exhibition of modernist
buildings in Adelaides Botanic Park in 1956 by a group of young architects who
were members of the Contemporary Architects Association.81 But for Morphett the
most significant outcome of the exhibition was his meeting with visiting guest
architect, Pietro Belluschi, who was head of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) School of Architecture in the USA. Belluschi encouraged
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
72
Morphett to undertake graduate studies in the USA, and Morphett subsequently
gained entry to MIT, where student architects worked in small teams and were
encouraged to collaborate with other disciplines. On completion of a Masters degree
in 1957 he obtained employment with The Architects Collaborative (TAC), formed
by Walter Gropius in the USA in 1945.82
Gropius had emigrated to the USA in 1937 and in 1938 established the Graduate
School of Design at Harvard University,83 which he headed until his retirement in the
mid-1950s. Although Gropius was 74 years old when Morphett joined TAC, and had
retired from his position at Harvard, his approach was much the same as when he was
Director of the Bauhaus. The process involved frequent presentations of work in
progress and peer review by all on the team, but the final decision always rested with
the presenter.84 Morphett was greatly impressed by this approach, which also allowed
younger architects to contribute ideas.
On his return in 1962, Morphett rejoined Hassell, McConnell & Partners, working on
many of its major projects with both Jack McConnell and Colin Hasssell, as well as
others. But his experience in the USA, and in particular working with Gropius, had a
strong influence on him and he was to become a major catalyst for changes in the
firm.
Commercial buildings
After the post-war austerity period ended in about 1953, there was a building boom,
fuelled by a rise in population and a consequent demand for housing, factory-
produced goods and schools.85 The capital cities grew rapidly and by the early 1960s
Adelaides population was approaching one million. This growth was accompanied by
a rise in real average weekly incomes by more than half over the period 194565.86
The resulting prosperity led to the appearance of more commercial structures and the
following buildings by Hassell, McConnell & Partners are a sample of these.
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Figure 7: Kodak offices (c. 1955), North Terrace, Adelaide city. (Source: Jack H McConnell
Collection, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S270/1/1)
The former Kodak office building on North Terrace, Adelaide (1955) (now the
Comfort Hotel) is one of several buildings in which a grid design and sun-shading
determine the aesthetic of the faade. The grid and sun-shading techniques, based on
McConnells 12 foot (3.6 metre) cubed planning module, were to feature in much of
the practices future work. Another floor has been added to the former Kodak building
and, although this has spoiled the design aesthetic, it is in keeping with modernist
principles of flat roofs allowing for additional floors, as mentioned earlier in this
paper.
The former ANZ Bank, Flinders Street, Adelaide (1956) (now a graphic design
studio), also uses a grid design and shows the sun-shading aesthetic applied to the
facade. McConnell used the sun-shading device in a more restrained manner here than
in the WD & HO Wills building at Mile End, which followed a little later. This was
probably as a result of the Wills building needing a greater degree of sun control due
to its aspect. Hassell, McConnell & Partners designed several other small bank
RethinkingModernArchitectureCarolineCosgrove
74
buildings in this period as new branches were formed; for example, the Savings Bank
at Ridleyton (1955).
Figure 8: ANZ Bank (c. 1955), Flinders Street, Adelaide City. (Source: Jack H McConnell Collection,
Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S270/1/1)
In 1960 the grid was again used in a different way when the firm was commissioned
to design a new commercial building for Charles Birks, later to become a David Jones
department store. Comprising ten floors and a basement, and with a total floor space
of almost ten acres (four hectares), this was the largest single building project in
Adelaide at the time. It was fitted with the latest technology, including air
conditioning, artificial lighting and fire protection, as well as eight lifts and twelve
escalators. Italian marble of varying colours was used to express the structural frame,
with rhythm and modulations introduced to integrate the faade in a unified
composition. 87 A sculpture on the Rundle Street (now Rundle Mall) faade provided a
focal point. On completion, the building was considered the most modern department
store in Australia.88
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Following David Jones decision to build a new store in Adelaide with a much larger
footprint on a nearby site, an unsuccessful attempt was made to have the original
David Jones Department Store included on the Heritage Register.89 Described as the
best example of a modernist department store in Australia, the original building failed
to gain approval for listing due to the building owners opposition.90 However, this
building, with additional floors, remains.
Education buildings
In the 1950s and 1960s, post-war tertiary education became a national priority and
greater educational funding was provided for universities.91 As well as developing
existing campuses, new ones were built, and in this period Hassell, McConnell &
Partners obtained one of their most notable commissions, the new Flinders University.
This was a greenfields development located in the Bedford Park foothills in
Adelaides southern suburbs, with panoramic views over the coastal plains and the
sea. It presented an architectural challenge as the buildings had to be ranged up and
across the ridged hillside, and linked by roads, steps and footpaths, with all to be part
of an integrated whole.92
Figure 9: South ridge, Flinders University (1968), Bedford Park, Adelaide. (Source: Jack H
McConnell Collection, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S270/1/5)
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Hassell, McConnell & Partners worked in conjunction with university planner,
Gordon Stephenson and staff architect, Geoffrey Harrison. Stephenson and Harrisons
site plan adopted the Radburn superblock concept, encircling the entire campus with a
road. The central space formed a pedestrian precinct that incorporated the academic
buildings in two parcels on north and south ridges.93 Jack McConnell planned the
north and south ridge building precincts, which were linked by a dam and a small lake
in the valley between. Many of Hassell, McConnell & Partners architects worked on
the project, and while Harrison found that most of the partners were strong characters
in different ways, he describes McConnell as very much the leading partner in a
team.94 In 1968 the north and south ridge buildings received the RAIA (SA Chapter)
Award of Merit. The judges assessment stated: The various courtyards, and the
arrangement of walkways at different levels, add a degree of excitement to the
complex Simple detailing and the use of plain, durable materials throughout are
most impressive and will undoubtedly minimize maintenance, which is an ever-
increasing problem in institutional buildings.95
Figure 10: Library, Flinders University, Bedford Park, Adelaide, 2010. (Photograph: Paul Wallace)
This design was different from the classical structures of earlier Australian university
architecture and in keeping with the practices approach. The themes of simple
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detailing; plain, durable materials; minimal maintenance; strong rhythm; efficiency;
and attention to the setting, are common to the practices architecture from the late
1930s.
New directions in the 1970s
In 1970 a major rift occurred when Jack McConnell was asked to leave the
partnership, and it became Hassell and Partners.96 The timing was ironic as it was the
same year that McConnell received the prestigious RAIA Gold Medal. In spite of
McConnells key role in the practice, Morphetts comment that we were sick and
tired of the autocratic mode97 gives some indication of the strength of feeling that
forced the break up. McConnells departure affected the Melbourne office, although
Hayward and Cory were able to continue there, and it was later to expand. The
Adelaide office continued without too much disruption as the new Adelaide Festival
Centre, a performing arts complex, was a major project and the firm gained other
commissions. However, Dick Roberts also left the practice after a 20-year association
and became Chairman of the Board of the South Australian Housing Trust (1970
75).98
In the 1970s the post-war economic boom was beginning to decline due to the
inflationary effects of the oil embargo imposed on the West by the Arab states.99 In
this uncertain economic environment, the practice adopted a collaborative approach,
extending its operations to include disciplines outside architecture; first planning and
landscape architecture, and later, interior design and urban design. The new approach
was a result of Walter Gropiuss influence on John Morphett. However, its
implementation required the support and business leadership of Colin Hassell, who
took the commercial view that it would be of value to have a multidisciplinary
practice, which had skills that complemented the core business of architecture.100 The
changes assisted the practice to expand nationally and internationally, but it continued
to produce work that reflected the basic principles of the early American and
European modernists.
Conclusion
A number of themes have emerged in considering the work of the architectural
practice HASSELL in the twentieth century. These include its role in introducing the
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functional modernist approach; the principles used in this approach to produce
innovative architecture; the practices influence on younger architects; and the
connections that helped it to develop. Like other architectural practices, HASSELL
experienced setbacks over the century, particularly in periods of economic downturn.
However, it was assisted initially by its Melbourne and later Canberra offices, and
from the 1970s it opened offices in Sydney, Perth and Brisbane; in 1987 it opened an
office in Auckland, New Zealand, which later closed. More recently it has expanded
into South East Asia, Hong Kong and China, reopened its Perth office, which had
closed, and opened offices in Darwin and the latest in London, United Kingdom
(2011). The extension into disciplines other than architecture, together with the
geographic spread of interstate and international offices, has allowed HASSELL to
continue its operations in a competitive and economically stringent environment.
The examples of HASSELLs buildings that I have discussed are evidence of the
innovative, functional architecture that are part of its contribution to Adelaides
twentieth century urban landscape. They are mainly non-residential buildings that
represent the economic, political and social period in which they were built, ranging
from the industrial to the commercial and educational, and, from the time of the
Festival Centre, cultural sectors. The Festival Centre, the former BALM Paints
factory, Deepacres Apartments, and the Bragg Laboratories at the University of
Adelaide are a small representative sample of HASSELLs buildings that are included
on the South Australian Heritage Register, and so are likely to be retained. Whether
any of HASSELLs other buildings will survive the continual drive for development
that has been sweeping away many of Adelaides twentieth century places remains to
be seen.
About the Author
Caroline Cosgrove is a PhD student in the School of Art, Architecture and Design at
the University of South Australia. She has worked as a professional historian in the
ACT and South Australia for many years and has been a president and vice-president
of the South Australian Professional Historians Association. Her PhD thesis is on
modern architecture in Australia and the role of the architectural firm HASSELL. She
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is assisted by a scholarship provided by HASSELL. Her interests include issues
relating to the significance of twentieth century built heritage.
1 Goad, Philip, SOM and Australia: architectural connections and collaborations, in The Pacific Connection, Miles Lewis (ed.) Melbourne: University of Melbourne, 2009. 2 Stropin, Fran, and Susan Marsden (eds), Twentieth Century Heritage: Marking the Recent Past, Adelaide: Australian Heritage Information Network, 2001, p. 5. 3 Marquis-Kyle, Peter and Meredith Walker, The Illustrated Burra Charter, Sydney: Australia ICOMOS Inc., 1992, p. 21; note that the Burra Charter was extensively revised in 1999, but the criteria remained the same. 4 Radford, Antony, Very Contemporary Heritage Architecture in 20th Century Heritage: our recent cultural legacy, David Jones (ed.), proceedings of the Australia ICOMOS National Conference 2001, Adelaide: The University of Adelaide, 2001, p. 38. 5 Stropin and Marsden (eds), Twentieth Century Heritage: Marking the Recent Past, p. 40. 6 Stropin and Marsden (eds), Twentieth Century Heritage: Marking the Recent Past, p. 41; MacDonald, Susan, Conserving the Recent Past: Recognition, Protection and Practical Challenges in 20th Century Heritage: our recent cultural legacy, p. 87. 7 Davison, Graeme, The Use and Abuse of Australian History, St. Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2000, p. 141. 8 Peter Spearritt quoted in Davison, The Use and Abuse of Australian History, p. 137. 9 Allan, Andrew, The Cultural Significance of Retail Environments in 20th Century Heritage: Our Recent Cultural Legacy, p. 371. 10 Stropin and Marsden (eds), Twentieth Century Heritage: Marking the Recent Past, p. 5. 11 Page, Michael, Sculptors in Space, South Australian Architects 1836-1986, Adelaide: The Royal Australian Institute of Architects (South Australian Chapter), 1986. 12 Freeland, J M, Architecture in Australia: A History, Melbourne, Victoria: Cheshire, 1968. 13 Johnson, Donald Leslie, Australian Architecture 1901-51: Sources of Modernism, Sydney: Sydney University Press, 1980. 14 Marsden, Susan, Carol Cosgrove, and Robyn Taylor, Twentieth Century Heritage Survey Stage 1: Post Second World War (1946-1959), Overview History, report for the South Australian Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide, 2003-04; Bell, Peter, Carol Cosgrove, Susan Marsden and Justin McCarthy, Twentieth Century Heritage Survey, Stage Two (19281945), 2 volumes,, report for the South Australian Department for Environment and Heritage, 2009. 15 Goad, Philip, Sanctioning Modernism: Architecture in Australia 19301970 in Fibro House, Opera House: Conserving Mid-Twentieth Century Heritage: Proceedings of a Conference Convened the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 23-24 July 1999, Sheridan Burke (ed.) Lyndhurst, NSW: The Trust, 2000, p. 33. 16 Hamann, Conrad, Cities of Hope: Australian Architecture and Design by Edmond & Corrigan 19621992, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, c.1993. 17 Goad, Philip, Rowan Wilken, and Julie Willis, Australian Modern: the Architecture of Stephenson and Turner, Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press, 2004. 18 Goad, Philip Bates Smart:150 Years of Australian Architecture, Fishermans Bend, Vic: Thames and Hudson, 2004. 19 Mazlin, Brian and Pem Gerner, Architecture By Team Devine Erby Mazlin: The Multidisciplinary Architectural Practice 19751995, Sydney: Focus, 2008. 20 Powell, Robert, Poetic Pragmatism, Sydney: Pesaro Publishing, 2003. 21 Goad, Sanctioning Modernism: Architecture in Australia 19301970, p. 34. 22 Ghirado, Diane, Architecture after Modernism, New York: Thames and Hudson, 1996, pp. 1012. 23 Frampton, Kenneth, Modern Architecture: A Critical History, London: Thames and Hudson, 1980, pp. 5163 and pp. 186191. 24 Benevolo, Leonardo, History of Modern Architecture. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1971, p. 412. 25 Benevolo, History of Modern Architecture, pp. 414429; Greenhalgh, P (ed.), Modernism in Design, London: Reaktion Books Ltd, 1990, p. 6; also see Droste, Magdalena, Bauhaus, Berlin: Bauhaus-Archiv Museum, 1990. 26 Greenhalgh, P (ed.), Modernism in Design, London: Reaktion Books Ltd, 1990, pp. 68.
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27 Giedion, S, Space, Time and Architecture, fifth ed. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1980, p. 292; Johnson, Donald Leslie and Donald Langmead, Makers of Twentieth Century Modern Architecture, Connecticut, USA: Greenwood Press, 1997, pp. xxixlvii. 28 Gropius, Walter, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, London: Faber and Faber, 1935, p. 21. 29 Gropius, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, pp. 2324. 30 Hitchcock, Henry-Russell and Philip Johnson, The International Style, New York, USA: WW Norton & Company Inc., 1966. 31 Gropius, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, p. 62. 32 Gropius, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, p. 62. 33 Gropius, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, p. 62. 34 Page, Michael, Sculptors in Space, p. 168. 35 Cosgrove, Carol, Moving to the Modern: Art Deco in South Australian Architecture, Architecture Museum, Louis Laybourne Smith School of Architecture and Design, University of South Australia, 2009, pp. 2628, pp. 4345 and p. 58. 36 Dutkiewicz, Adam, Brian Claridge: Architect of Light and Space, Adelaide: Architecture Museum, Louis Laybourne Smith School of Architecture and Design, University of South Australia, 2008, p. 8. 37 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 168. 38 Bird, Louise, Russell Ellis: Pioneer Modernist Architect, Architecture Museum, Louis Laybourne Smith School of Architecture and Design, University of South Australia, 2007, p. 14. 39 Horton, Timothy, Obituary: Frank Colin Hassell AO 19102007 in Place South Australia, December 2007, p. 47. 40 Hansen Yuncken, 90+ Hansen Yuncken, Adelaide: Hansen Yuncken, 2008, p. 58. 41 Brine, Judith, Hassells Birthday, Architect South Australia, no. 2, 1990, p. 35. 42 Cosgrove, Carol, Art Deco: its place in South Australias architectural heritage, unpublished report for the South Australian Department for Environment and Heritage Built Heritage Research Fellowship 2007/2008 at the Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, pp. 3032. 43 Colin Hassell, Curriculum Vitae, copy given to the author by David Hassell. 44 Architect John Chappel, who was tutored by McConnell, in Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 236. 45 Willis, Julie, Conscious Design: The Melbourne University Architectural Atelier, 19191947, Fabrications, vol. 13, no. 2, 2004, 53. 46 McConnell, Jack H, The Future of Architecture: Speech to the Architecture Foundation Inc., Jack H McConnell collection, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, 27 October 1996, S 270/4/57; also see Edquist, Harriet, Harold Desbrowe-Annear: A Life in Architecture, Carlton, Vic.: Miegunyah Press, 2004. 47 Page, Michael, Sculptors in Space, p. 185. 48 McConnell, The Future of Architecture. 49 The later house won an RAIA (SA Chapter) Award, see: Architects House for JH McConnell in Architecture Australia, vol. 59, no. 2, April 1970, pp. 296298. 50 Taylor, Robyn, unpublished essay and notes of interview with Jack McConnell, Adelaide, 1984. 51 RAIA Year Book, Year Book of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects, Sydney, NSW: The Institute, 1939, p. 87. 52 Move by Young Architects in The News, 22 February 1938, in Rolfe Boehm scrap book, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S216/3/1. 53 Harry, Bruce & Associates, Deepacres Apartments Conservation Management Plan, unpublished report for the Department of Environment and Heritage, 1996, p. 18. 54 Bird, Russell Ellis: Pioneer Modernist Architect, p. 17. 55 Interview with Newell Platten, 3 May 2011. 56 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 185. 57 Interview with John Morphett, 3 June 2010. 58 Neighbour, Keith, Vale Jack Hobbs McConnell 19132005, in Architecture Australia, July/August 2005. 59 Cockburn, Stewart, Notable Lives: Profiles of 21 South Australians, Norwood, SA: Ferguson Publications, 1997, p. 118. 60 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 183. 61 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 183. 62 Hassell, Colin Holland Goes Her Own Way, in The Advertiser, April 17, 1937. 63 McDougall & Vines, Port Adelaide Centre Heritage Survey, unpublished report prepared for the Corporation of the City of Port Adelaide, 199394, p. 107; Jack McConnell advised that Colin Hassell
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designed the building see McConnell, Jack H, Correspondence relating to Register of Twentieth Century Architecture in South Australia, Jack H McConnell collection, Architecture Museum, University of South Australia, S 270/4/58. 64 West, KC, The Builders, Adelaide: The Master Builders Association of South Australia (Inc.), 1984, p. 66. 65 Rich, David C, Toms Vision? Playford and industrialisation, in Playford's South Australia, Bernard O'Neil, Judith Raftery and Kerrie Round (eds), Adelaide: Association of Professional Historians Inc., 1996, pp. 91116. 66 Macintyre, Stuart, A Concise History of Australia, third edition, Port Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2009, pp. 208209. 67 Johnson and Langmead, Makers of Twentieth Century Modern Architecture, p. xli. 68 Droste, Magdalena, Bauhaus (Koln: Taschen, 2006), p. 10. 69 Goad, The Business of Modernism: propriety and process in corporate architecture, in Goad et al, Australian Modern: the Architecture of Stephenson and Turner, p. 45. 70 International Harvester Company of Australia Pty Ltd, souvenir brochure, Geelong Works, Harold Griggs Collection, Architecture Museum, S167/1380, nd. 71 Taylor, Robyn unpublished essay and notes of interview with Jack McConnell, Adelaide, 1984. 72 Schenk, John, Modernist Man was Suitably Ancient as Well, Place South Australia, vol. 1, no.1, May 2005, p. 28. 73 Taylor, Robyn unpublished essay and notes of interview with Jack McConnell. 74 Taylor, Robyn unpublished essay and notes of interview with Jack McConnell. 75 John Morphetts conversation with Henry Hayward, HASSELL archives, 28 July 1998. 76 The office later moved to South Yarra, where it remained for 30 years before moving to Melbourne city. 77 John Morphetts conversation with Henry Hayward. 78 Taylor, essay and notes of interview with Jack McConnell. 79 Schenk, Modernist Man was Suitably Ancient as Well, p. 28. 80 Interview with John Morphett, 3 June 2010. 81 Interview with John Morphett, 3 June 2010. 82 Morphett, John, Diversity and Collaboration, The AS Hook address by John Morphett, 2000 RAIA Gold Medallist in Architecture Australia, September/October 2000, p. 102. 83 Johnson and Langmead, Makers of Twentieth Century Modern Architecture, p. 134. 84 Morphett, Diversity and Collaboration, p. 102. 85 Macintyre, A Concise History of Australia, p. 202. 86 Macintyre, A Concise History of Australia, p. 220. 87 Charles Birks New Store has many firsts, Building and Architecture, vol. 1, no. 9, August 1962, pp. 39. 88 Hansen Yuncken, 90+ Hansen Yuncken. Adelaide: Hansen Yuncken, 2008, p. 92. 89 Radford, Antony, Very Contemporary Heritage Architecture in 20th Century Heritage: our recent cultural legacy, p. 39. 90 Radford, Very Contemporary Heritage Architecture, p. 39. 91 Goad, Philip and Patrick Bingham-Hall, New Directions in Australian Architecture, Balmain, NSW: Pesaro Publishing, 2001, p. 29. 92 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 228. 93 Garnaut, Christine, Gordon Stephenson and University Planning: a pleasurable professional pursuit, Town Planning Review (forthcoming). 94 Holt, Averil, Interview with Geoffrey Harrison, 1986, p. 13. 95 Quoted in Harry, Bruce and Associates, Deepacres Conservation Management Plan, unpublished report to the South Australian Department of Environment and Heritage, 1996, p. 14. 96 Interview with John Morphett, 3 June 2010. 97 Interview with John Morphett, 3 June 2010. 98 Page, Sculptors in Space, p. 261. 99 Macintyre, A Concise History of Australia, p. 240. 100 Interview with Stephen Williams, 20 September 2010.